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Arsenic and Mn levels in Isaza (Gymnogobius isaza) during the mass mortality event in Lake Biwa, Japan
2011
Hirata, Sawako Horai | Hayase, Daisuke | Eguchi, Akifumi | Itai, Takaaki | Nomiyama, Kei | Isobe, Tomohiko | Agusa, Tetsuro | Ishikawa, Toshiyuki | Kumagai, Michio | Tanabe, Shinsuke
The present study measured the concentrations of 25 elements (Li, Mg, V, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Se, Rb, Sr, Mo, Ag, Cd, In, Sn, Sb, Cs, Ba, Hg, Tl, Pb and Bi) in the whole body of Isaza which is an endemic fish species to Lake Biwa, Japan, and compared the values in the specimens from the mass mortality Isaza (MMI) and normal fresh Isaza (NFI). The mean levels of Mn and total As (T-As) were relatively higher in MMI than in NFI. In the T-As, highly toxic inorganic As was detected in MMI. Moreover we found Mn and As concentrations in surface sediment were extremely high and temporally increased. From all these results, we could infer that the dissolution of Mn and As from surface sediment of Lake Biwa might have been one of the cause for the mass mortality of Isaza.
Show more [+] Less [-]Monitoring of heavy metal concentrations in home outdoor air using moss bags
2011
Rivera, Marcela | Zechmeister, Harald | Medina-Ramón, Mercedes | Basagaña, Xavier | Foraster, Maria | Bouso, Laura | Moreno, Teresa | Solanas, Pascual | Ramos, Rafael | Köllensperger, Gunda | Deltell, Alexandre | Vizcaya, David | Künzli, Nino
One monitoring station is insufficient to characterize the high spatial variation of traffic-related heavy metals within cities. We tested moss bags (Hylocomium splendens), deployed in a dense network, for the monitoring of metals in outdoor air and characterized metals’ long-term spatial distribution and its determinants in Girona, Spain. Mosses were exposed outside 23 homes for two months; NO₂ was monitored for comparison. Metals were not highly correlated with NO₂ and showed higher spatial variation than NO₂. Regression models explained 61–85% of Cu, Cr, Mo, Pb, Sb, Sn, and Zn and 72% of NO₂ variability. Metals were strongly associated with the number of bus lines in the nearest street. Heavy metals are an alternative traffic-marker to NO₂ given their toxicological relevance, stronger association with local traffic and higher spatial variability. Monitoring heavy metals with mosses is appealing, particularly for long-term exposure assessment, as mosses can remain on site many months without maintenance.
Show more [+] Less [-]Implementation of airborne trace element monitoring with devitalised transplants of Hypnum cupressiforme Hedw.: Assessment of temporal trends and element contribution by vehicular traffic in Naples city
2011
Adamo, P. | Giordano, S. | Sforza, A. | Bargagli, R.
A biomonitoring of airborne trace elements was performed in 2006 in Naples urban area through the exposure of devitalised Hypnum cupressiforme for 10 weeks at 4m height. In one street, the moss was exposed at different heights to assess vertical gradients of element concentrations. Results were compared with those of a 1999 biosurvey. Correlations among Al, Fe and Ti suggested a soil particles contribution to element uptake. Cu, Mo and Fe were related with traffic flows. Long-range transport contributed to Cd, Cu and Mo accumulation in moss at higher heights. As in 1999, the airborne element load was higher in coastal sites, more affected by marine aerosols and traffic. In all sites, contents of Cd, Fe, Pb, Ni and V in moss were remarkably lower than in 1999, indicating a positive effect of actions set up in recent years to reduce the traffic and to improve the city air quality.
Show more [+] Less [-]Accumulation features of trace elements in mass-stranded harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) in the North Sea coast in 2002: The body distribution and association with growth and nutrition status
2011
Agusa, Tetsuro | Yasugi, Shin-ya | Iida, Asami | Ikemoto, Tokutaka | Anan, Yasumi | Kuiken, Thijs | Osterhaus, Albert D.M.E. | Tanabe, Shinsuke | Iwata, Hisato
Body distribution and growth- and nutritional status-dependent accumulation of 21 trace elements were investigated in harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) stranded in the North Sea coast in 2002. Higher concentrations and burdens of Mn, Se, Mo, Ag, Sn, Hg, and Bi in the liver, Cd in the kidney, As in the blubber, and Co, Sr, and Ba in the bone were observed. Significant positive correlations of hepatic Se, Mo, Ag, Cd, Sn, Hg, Tl, and Bi with standard body length were found, while significant negative relationships were detected for Mn, As, Rb, Sr, and Sb in the liver. Concentrations of Co, Se, Sr, Sn, Hg, and Bi in the liver, V, Sr, Ag, Sn, and Hg in the kidney, V, Mn, Co, Rb, Sr, Sn, Ba, and Pb in the blubber increased with decreasing blubber thickness of harbor seals, indicating enrichment of these elements in the target tissue by emaciation.
Show more [+] Less [-]Accumulation of trace elements in harp seals (Phoca groenlandica) from Pangnirtung in the Baffin Island, Canada
2011
Agusa, Tetsuro | Nomura, Kumiko | Kunito, Takashi | Anan, Yasumi | Iwata, Hisato | Tanabe, Shinsuke
Nineteen trace elements were determined in liver, muscle, kidney, gonads, and hair of 18 harp seals (Phoca groenlandica) from Pangnirtung in the Baffin Island, Canada. Concentrations of V, Mn, Fe, Cu, Mo, Ag, and Hg in the liver, Co, Cd, and Tl in the kidney, and Ba and Pb in the hair were significantly higher than those in other tissues. Significant positive correlations between Hg concentrations in the hair, and liver, kidney and testis imply usefulness of the hair sample for non-destructive monitoring of Hg in the harp seals. It is suggested that whereas Hg preferentially accumulates in the liver, the accumulation in other tissues is induced at higher hepatic Hg levels. In contrast, Se may not be accumulated in other tissues compared with the liver even at higher hepatic Hg levels because of the presence of excess Se for Hg detoxification in other tissues.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of heavy metals and arsenic speciation discharged by the industrial activity on the Tinto-Odiel estuary, SW Spain
2011
Pérez López, Rafael | Nieto, José Miguel | López-Cascajosa, M José | Díaz-Blanco, M Jesús | Sarmiento, Aguasanta M. | Oliveira, Vanesa | Sánchez-Rodas, Daniel
This study reports the annual amount of heavy metals discharged by industrial activity into the estuary of the Ría of Huelva (SW Spain). The findings showed that the discharged metals found in highest amounts were Fe (11ty⁻¹), Zn (3.4ty⁻¹) and Mo (0.88ty⁻¹). There were other metals with high pollutant charge, such as Ti (232kgy⁻¹), As (228kgy⁻¹), Ni (195kgy⁻¹), Pb (100kgy⁻¹), Cr (39kgy⁻¹) and Cd (33kgy⁻¹). These results were compared with pollutants transported via the Tinto and Odiel rivers from abandoned mining activities in the Iberian Pyrite Belt (IPB), and it was deduced that the amounts spilled exclusively by industries were less than 1% in relation to the total discharge. Hence, the treatment of residues from the IPB should be the priority goal to improve water quality in the estuary.
Show more [+] Less [-]Growth and Physiological Responses of Triticum aestivum and Deschampsia caespitosa Exposed to Petroleum Coke
2011
Nakata, Colin | Qualizza, Clara | MacKinnon, Mike | Renault, Sylvie
Over the past decades, the global production of petroleum coke, a by-product of the oil sand industry, has increased with the growing importance of oil sands as a source of fossil fuels. A greenhouse study using Triticum aestivum and Deschampsia caespitosa was conducted to assess the growth and physiological effects of coke on plants. The plants were grown in cokes with or without a cap of peat–mineral mix and were compared to plants grown in a peat–mineral mix (control). Our results indicate that the selected plants can survive in coke; however, stress symptoms such as reductions in transpiration (45–91%) and stomatal conductance rates (44–92%) in T. aestivum, biomass in T. aestivum (5–83%) and D. caespitosa (43–90%), photosynthetic pigments in T. aestivum (32–68%) and D. caespitosa (33–44%) and proline concentrations in D. caespitosa (77–97%) were observed. Furthermore, potentially phytotoxic concentrations of nickel (47–69 μg g−1 in D. caespitosa) and vanadium (9.3–18.3 μg g−1 in T. aestivum and 4–27.8 μg g−1 in D. caespitosa) were found in some tissues while molybdenum accumulated in D. caespitosa shoots at concentrations reported, in other studies, to cause molybdenosis in ruminants. These results suggest that the plants growing in coke could experience multiple stresses including water stress, nutrient deficiencies and/or Ni and V toxicity. Capping coke with peat–mineral mix limited the stress symptoms and could improve revegetation success of coke impoundment sites. This study provides baseline data for future long-term field studies essential for developing coke management guidelines.
Show more [+] Less [-]Mixing of Acid Rock Drainage with Alkaline Ash Leachates—Fate and Immobilisation of Trace Elements
2011
Bäckström, Mattias | Sartz, Lotta
Acid rock drainage (ARD) often contains ferrous iron, sulphate and high concentrations of trace elements detrimental to the environment. Future costs will be enormous if the problem is not treated today. Simple and cost-effective methods for remediation of historical mine sites are therefore desired. In this study, three mine waters were mixed with alkaline ash leachates, and the fate of trace elements from both the mine waters (Cd, Cu, Pb, Zn, Ni and Co) and the ash leachates (Cr and Mo) was studied. Addition of ash water precipitates hydrous ferric oxides (HFO) and hydrous aluminium oxides (HAO) induced trace element sorption and coprecipitation. Composition of the formed HFO/HAO mix determines efficiency of the sorption and the relative order of sorption for different trace elements. Sorption occurred much earlier (often one pH unit or more) in a system with high iron concentrations compared to systems with lower iron concentrations. Removal of cadmium and zinc was low, below pH 8, if the amount of precipitates was low. Using ash for generation of alkaline water may be a problem with regard to chromium and molybdenum. This study shows that it is possible to avoid problems with molybdenum by keeping the final pH around 7, and chromium(VI) from the ash water will be reduced into chromium(III) and precipitated as the hydroxide in the presence of iron(II). Results imply that it is possible to also use fly ashes in alkaline leach beds in order to neutralize ARD followed by precipitation and sorption of trace elements.
Show more [+] Less [-]Biomonitoring of chemical elements in an urban environment using arboreal and bush plant species
2011
Rucandio, Maria Isabel | Petit-Domínguez, Maria Dolores | Fidalgo Hijano, Concepción | García-Giménez, Rosario
PURPOSE: The aim of this work was to investigate the possibility of using several bush and arboreal plant species, usually present as ornamental plants in street and parks, as environmental indicators of pollution. This is a research paper that evaluates the real possibility of using a fast and low-cost procedure to evaluate the pollution degree through data obtained from plant species growing within an urban environment. METHODS: Leaves of six different bush and arboreal species were collected from different parts of Madrid (Spain), ranging from highly polluted considered areas to medium and low contaminated ones. A total of 66 chemical elements, from major to minor and trace, were determined for every leaf sample by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Statistical analyses were carried out using mainly box and whisker plots, linear discriminant analysis and cluster analysis. RESULTS: The pollution by different elements of the studied areas of Madrid cannot be considered generally dangerous for human health. The level detected for the contaminants, in general, is similar or lower than other urban cities. Pb and V concentrations in plant samples tend to increase as traffic density increases. The different studied plant species showed a different capability of accumulation of certain elements. Cedrus deodara accumulates specially Ag, Hg, Mo and V; Cupressus sempervirens, Zr; Pinus pinea, As and Sb; Nerium oleander Ni, Pb, Mo and Se; Ligustrum ovalifolium, Sc and V; and Pittosporum tobira, Ag, Cd, Rb and Sc. CONCLUSIONS: The leaves and needles collected from bush and arboreal plants common in this city have demonstrated to be useful to evaluate the level of pollution not only through the chemical analysis but also through the recognition of the visual injury symptoms. The application of multivariate statistical techniques combined with determining of element concentration and correlation analysis has been proved to be an effective tool for reach the objectives of the present work. This allows visualising quickly the damages and leading the sampling through the points of high-level pollution, saving analysis, time and money.
Show more [+] Less [-]Do metal concentrations in moss from the Zackenberg area, Northeast Greenland, provide a baseline for monitoring?
2011
Zechmeister, Harald G. | Dullinger, Stefan | Koellensperger, Gunda | Ertl, Siegrun | Lettner, Christian | Reiter, Karl
PURPOSE: This study aims at evaluating (a) whether concentrations of a suite of elements in mosses sampled in the arctic region around Zackenberg reflect background concentrations useful for estimating pollution levels in industrialized parts of the northern hemisphere as is attempted, e.g. in the framework of the UNECE ICP Vegetation monitoring programme, and (b) whether there are any influences from Zackenberg research station detectable in these concentrations. METHODS: Two moss species were sampled according to guidelines used in the UNECE ICP Vegetation programme. Samples were analysed for ¹⁹⁵Pt at low resolution, ²⁷Al, ⁵²Cr, ⁶⁵Cu, ⁶⁶Zn, ⁹⁵Mo, ¹¹¹Cd, ¹¹⁸Sn, ¹²¹Sb and ²⁰⁸Pb at medium resolution and ⁷⁵As at high resolution on an Element 2 inductively coupled plasma sector field mass spectrometer. RESULTS: Except for Al, As and Cr, data from Zackenberg showed significantly lower mean element concentrations than those reported in comparable studies from all over the world including those from other Arctic environments. Minimum concentrations in Zackenberg mosses were consistently below all values reported so far for all elements analysed. The results of a PCA suggested only a slight impact from Zackenberg research station on concentrations of Cd, Mo and Zn in moss. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the sites in Zackenberg can be considered true background sites providing baseline concentrations of at least eight elements for comparable monitoring studies.
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